Crime & Safety
Aimee Bock, "Mastermind" Of Minnesota's Biggest Fraud Scheme, Says "I Wish I Could Go Back And Do Things Differently"
During a five-week trial last year, prosecutors alleged Bock signed off reimbursement claims for millions of meals that were never served.

Updated on: January 20, 2026 / 7:34 AM CST
The Trump administration has justified its ongoing immigration crackdown in Minnesota by citing a need to curb fraud and pointing to a widening scandal involving members of the Somali American community. Yet prosecutors say the mastermind of the state's biggest fraud scheme to date was not Somali but a White woman, 45-year-old Aimee Bock.
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In an exclusive interview from her jail cell, Bock defended her conduct, admitted regrets and argued that state officials who she worked with should bear some of the blame. It was the first time Bock spoke publicly since she was arrested for her role in what prosecutors say was a $250 million COVID-era effort to defraud a federal program to feed hungry children.
"I wish I could go back and do things differently, stop things, catch things," said Bock, who was the head of Feeding Our Future, the now-infamous nonprofit that signed up restaurants and caterers to receive taxpayer money for providing meals to kids. "I believed we were doing everything in our power to protect the program."
Find out what's happening in Across Minnesotafor free with the latest updates from Patch.
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Aimee Bock in jail in Minnesota/CBS News
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